Volume 21, Issue 3 pp. 336-344

Fasciculation potentials: A study of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and other neurogenic disorders

Mamede de Carvalho MD

Mamede de Carvalho MD

Departments of Neurology, Hospital of Santa Maria, Lisbon, Portugal

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Michael Swash MD

Corresponding Author

Michael Swash MD

St Bartholomew's and Royal London School of Medicine and Dentistry, The Royal London Hospital, London E1 1BB, United Kingdom

St Bartholomew's and Royal London School of Medicine and Dentistry, The Royal London Hospital, London E1 1BB, United KingdomSearch for more papers by this author

Abstract

We studied fasciculation potentials in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and in other neurogenic disorders, in strength and single-fiber electromyography-matched muscles. Benign fasciculations were studied in 3 normal subjects. Fasciculations were more stable and easier to recruit voluntarily in the early phase of ALS; later, fasciculations were more unstable, more complex, and less likely to be voluntarily recruited. Stable fasciculations, representing part of large, reinnervated motor units, and probably arising from distal axonal sprouts, usually had a higher firing rate than more complex and unstable fasciculations. In weak muscles in ALS, fasciculations were generally more unstable than in other neurogenic disorders. In normal-strength muscles fasciculations are less complex in ALS than in other disorders. Benign fasciculations have a high firing rate and normal morphologic parameters. In ALS fasciculations arise proximally early in the disease and distally in the later stages. Fasciculation may be important in excitotoxic cell death in ALS. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Muscle Nerve 21:336–344.

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